Research paper topics, free example research papers

Aaron Barret - 873 words
Aaron Barret Bio of Aaron Barrett
(singer/guitarist of Reel Big Fish) - from
official website Little Aaron Barrett was born a
very small 0-year old child on August 30th once.
He was really tiny. He had a cute head and a soft
button nose. He was wiggly. He liked breathing
air. He was really, really cute and he had a mom
that was a cute little blonde lady and a dad that
had a big black beard. Sometimes they would take
pictures of little Aaron Barrett because they
thought he was so cute and they wanted to look at
photographs of him being little someday when he
was big. Little Aaron Barrett had brown hair.
Sometimes he sang songs about being happy and
other things like that. His voice was really ...
Related: aaron, official website, high school, backstreet boys, amazing

Abortion Prochoice Views - 1,417 words
Abortion - Pro-Choice Views Introduction From 1973
to 1987, over 22 million abortions have been
performed. Pro-lifers would call that a terrible
waste of human life. True, 22 million lives were
taken, but I believe that we are better off
without those. Please let me explain in the
following report. What is abortion? Webster's
dictionary defines abortion as "the expulsion of a
nonviable fetus." Abortion might possibly be the
most controversial topic right now. I'm sure by
now that you've heard of all the different types
of abortion. Almost all abortions performed in the
US are surgical abortions, where the fetus is
removed by suction or other means. (Medication
offers another option, to be di ...
Related: abortion, human life, lower class, planned parenthood, harassing

Abortion Prolife View - 1,104 words
... oved by God who has a distinct plan for their
lives. It denies the child the right to live and
society the privilege of the childs gift and
contributions to the world. "God hears the new
life in the womb, the heart within the heart, the
anguish cry of hostage child sobbing in the dark."
Many times after having an abortion, a woman will
become emotionally unstable. Post-abortion
syndrome describes the trauma of the woman who
finally feels guilty, understands the
repercussions of her actions, and regrets her
previous decision. Statistics show that 92% feel
less in touch with their emotions or feel a need
to suppress their emotions. 82% had greater
feelings of loneliness or isolation and 86 ...
Related: abortion, human nature, moral responsibility, senate judiciary committee, rage

Abortion Prolife View - 1,093 words
... the right to live and society the privilege
of the childs gift and contributions to the world.
God hears the new life in the womb, the heart
within the heart, the anguish cry of hostage child
sobbing in the dark. Many times after having an
abortion, a woman will become emotionally
unstable. Post-abortion syndrome describes the
trauma of the woman who finally feels guilty,
understands the repercussions of her actions, and
regrets her previous decision. Statistics show
that 92% feel less in touch with their emotions or
feel a need to suppress their emotions. 82% had
greater feelings of loneliness or isolation and
86% had increased tendency toward anger or rage.
53% increased or began use ...
Related: abortion, online available, united states senate, pro-life movement, minute

Abstract - 744 words
Abstract Animal experimentation has been going on
for a while now and people have been protesting
against it since it has begun. It seems now days
there are more cons for animal experiments because
of how it has become a popular topic to this day.
The pros seem to think that animal experiments are
necessary for living a healthy life. With all of
the debating going on, animal experimentation may
be halted. Animal Experimentation Should animal
experimentation be regulated? Do animals have the
same rights we do? These are questions that are of
much debate. Animals are used in experiments all
of the time, whether they are testing a new drug,
or testing their reactions to a new fabric
softener. B ...
Related: abstract, human ethics, human responsibility, animal testing, peta

Abstract Expressionism - 1,560 words
Abstract Expressionism "What about the reality of
the everyday world and the reality of painting?
They are not the same realities. What is this
creative thing that you have struggled to get and
where did it come from? What reference or value
does it have, outside of the painting itself?" Ad
Reinhardt, in a group discussion at Studio 35, in
1950. My essay starts with the origin and the
birth of this great expression in the twentieth
century. This movement not only touched painting,
it had an affect on various aspects of art-
poetry, architecture, theater, film, photography.
Vasily Kandinsky, Kazimir Malevich and Piet
Mondrian are considered to be the pioneer artists
to have achieved a truly a ...
Related: abstract, abstract expressionism, expressionism, german expressionism, modern architecture

Abuse Can Rewire Kids Brains - 435 words
Abuse Can Rewire Kids' Brains Abuse Can Rewire
Kids Brains This article discusses the detrimental
effects that abuse can have on a childs
neurological activity. Children who are abused
physically and psychologically show vehement
neuronal excitation when observing pictures of
angry faces. Children who are not victims of abuse
do not experience such outrageous levels of
neurological arousal when shown pictures of angry
faces. Research conducted at the Child Emotion
Research Laboratory suggests that the brains of
abused are wired differently from those of kids
who were not abused. Perhaps this is because the
abused child develops a more acute set of survival
skills. The brain is simply adaptin ...
Related: abuse, research laboratory, environment plays, future research, differently

Adolf Hitler - 1,279 words
ADOLF HITLER Adolf Hitler changed the course of
history. His childhood strongly shaped his
personality. There were many deciding factors that
determined the kind of person Hitler finally
became. Adolf's father was Alois, an illegitimate
child, his mother was Marie Schickulgruber. Alois
took his fathers name Hitler before Adolf was
born. Alois was already a successful border guard
when he was 18, and later became an Austrian
customs official. He retired in 1849 after 40
years of service. He was 58 and retired early
because of bad health. After he retired he bought
a nine acre farm near the small town of Hafeld.
His dream was to live a country life, but the farm
took much more work than he exp ...
Related: adolf, adolf hitler, hitler, otto von bismarck, mein kampf

Adolf Hitler - 1,870 words
Adolf Hitler For the past week I have been
researching three men, Joseph Stalin, Mao, and
Adolf Hitler for an answer to a question; who is
the most evil? Which, means that I had to think
about what exactly was evil for me. Now the
dictionary they have a simple definition for it,
which is: morally reprehensible, sinful, wicked.
But there could be so many different meanings,
because there are many different people in the
world. So, these three men were judged on my
definition of evil. Evil to me is someone who
consciously knows what there doing but still
doesnt care, someone who purposely tries to cause
destruction on other people, one who possibly
thinks that they are somewhat of a messiah, a ...
Related: adolf, adolf hitler, hitler, vienna hitler, right to vote

Adopted Children Should Know Their Biological Parents - 563 words
Adopted Children should Know their Biological
Parents Giving birth is like pulling your lower
lip over your head -Carol Lucawikz When a mother
gives birth to her child it is the ultimate
bonding experience. And when a mother gives her
child up for adoption, it is a selfless act for
the childs best interests, but not a painless one.
Every parent that is involved in an adoption
arrangement will wonder and worry about their
child for many days of many years. Curiosity is
powerful, and it is not uncommon to long to be
reunited with ones own flesh and blood. Adopted
children have a right to know who their biological
parents are. Health reasons, curiosity, and the
need to bond with family are all ...
Related: adopted children, biological, genetic disease, family background, parent

Afganistans Apartheid - 1,096 words
Afganistan`s Apartheid Beginning on September 27,
1996, an extremist militia group known as the
Taliban seized control of Kabul, the capital of
Afghanistan. Upon seizing control, the Taliban has
instituted a system of gender apartheid, which has
placed women into a state of virtual house arrest.
Since that time the women and girls of Afghanistan
have been stripped of all human rights including
their voice, visibility and their mobility. The
Campaign to stop Gender Apartheid, led by the
Feminist Majority Foundation, has brought together
numerous human right and womens organizations
around the world to demand an end to the abuses of
the women in Afghanistan. In the 1980s when the
Soviet Union ...
Related: apartheid, naturalization service, nations high commissioner, family member, islamic

Akria - 930 words
Akria Akira is a beautiful and also haunting film.
It gives the viewer a look into a post apocalyptic
Japan 30 years after an H-bomb destroys Tokyo. It
follows a gang of punk bickers when one of their
friends are captured and tested for a project the
government called Akira. When their friend cannot
control his new powers it leads to his distraction
at the end of the film. With a sometimes-spiritual
theme Akira was a groundbreaking film in the world
of animation. In the years sense has the film
developed a cult following from young men. Akira
in many film historians minds is the film that
started the animation revolution of the nineteen
nineties. The vision of creator Katsuhiro Otomo,
who or ...
Related: blockbuster video, comic book, marvel comics, likes, disney

Alcohol Tobacco Advertising On The Web - 1,210 words
Alcohol & Tobacco Advertising On The Web As
adults, how do we encourage our children to
explore the rich resources of the Internet without
exposing them to a steady stream of marketing
massages, such as junk e-mail, sexually explicit
material and hate-mail? This is a question that
many people in our society, including parents and
educators are struggling to answer. Although we
have yet to reach a consensus on this matter, one
possible solution is to filter or block this
objectionable material from our children without
interfering with the rights of adults to view and
visit any Web site they like. When the US Supreme
Court overturned the Communications Decency Act in
June of 1997, industry an ...
Related: advertising, advertising campaign, alcohol, big tobacco, online advertising, tobacco, tobacco advertising

Alcoholism - 2,013 words
... times increased consumption of alcohol are
cited in evidence. But these data invariably fail
to take account of changes in availability or use
of facilities, changes in admission or diagnostic
policies, or changes in the source of
beverages--for example, from unrecorded to
recorded supplies. In the Soviet Union a change in
the internal political situation with the death of
Stalin resulted in a shift from official denial
that any significant problem of alcoholism existed
to an outcry that its prevalence was widespread
and serious, though no statistics were provided.
Treatment of alcoholism The various treatments of
alcoholism may be classified as physiological,
psychological, and social. ...
Related: alcoholism, carbon dioxide, psychoactive drugs, alcoholics anonymous aa, therapy

Alfred Hitchcock - 1,554 words
... pathy for a peeping Tom killer in his forties
(the age of the murderer in Bloch's novel), the
director proposed using a much younger character
and even suggested to the writer that Perkins get
the lead role(Rebello 111). When Hitchcock began
production on PSYCHO, he was told that he would
have to use the facilities at Revue Studios, the
television division of Universal Studios, which
Paramount had rented for the making of the
film(Rebello 112). Although he was unable to use
his regular cinematographer, Robert Burks,
Hitchcock managed to convince Paramount that his
special editor, George Tomasini, should be
included in the production(Rebello 110). The
director's desire for detail was in f ...
Related: alfred, alfred hitchcock, hitchcock, dressing room, high school

Alice In Wonderland - 1,801 words
Alice In Wonderland Finding the Child in Us All
Lewis Carroll's classic Alice's Adventures in
Wonderland has entertained not only children but
adults for over one hundred years. The tale has
become a treasure of philosophers, literary
critics, psychoanalysts, and linguists. It also
has attracted Carroll's fellow mathematicians and
logicians. There appears to be something in Alice
for everyone, and there are almost as many
explanations of the work as there are
commentators. It may be perhaps Carroll's
fantastical style of writing that entertains the
reader, rather than teaching them a lesson as was
customary in his time. Heavy literary symbolism is
difficult to trace through his works because ...
Related: alice, alice in wonderland, wonderland, nineteenth century, young adult

All The Kings Men: Historys Importance - 1,225 words
All the King's Men: History's Importance
Throughout All the King's Men, history plays an
important role in the motivations and lives of all
the characters. History's importance is most
noticeable, not surprisingly, in the story main
characters - Willie Stark and Jack Burden - whose
lives focus on and, in some cases, depend upon
history and how they relate themselves to it.
While Willie Stark views history as a tool with
which to manipulate people for his own ends, an
attitude resulting in his own destruction, Jack
Burden's view of history changes over time and
eventually allows him to accept his relationship
to the past and, therefore, present. Since each
man has such a differing view it is ...
Related: cause and effect, important role, different ways, history, update

Ambrotypes Were A Direct Positive Process Effect Achieved On Glass Coated With Lightsensitive Collodion, Backed With Black Pa - 345 words
Ambrotypes were a direct positive process effect
achieved on glass coated with light-sensitive
collodion, backed with black paint, paper or even
black velvet.. It is also known as a collodion
positive. They are often confused with
Daguerreotypes because they were often housed in
dag cases and confused with Tintypes because the
images look very similar.. The process was
invented by Frederick Scott Archer and Peter Fry
in 1851, but was patented in the US (Boston, MA)
by James Ambrose Cutting in 1854. .James Cutting
was born in Worcester, Massachusetts, in 1814. His
family moved to Vermont and took up farming and
there Cutting devised and patented a new kind of
bee hive, bringing him profit and ...
Related: glass, confused, copper

Amenhotep Iv - 2,372 words
Amenhotep Iv During the time of the New Kingdom of
Egypt, peace reigned throughout the nation.
Egypt's enemies the Hyksos had been removed from
rule and Egypt prospered. In fact she become an
empire. By the time Amenhotop III sat on the
throne Egypt was a land of wealth. Amenhotop was
considered to be an equal or better Among other
rulers throughout the area. Other rulers from
neighboring lands refer to him as brother. Life in
the royal house was grand. He built a huge palace
in Thebes which, included a lake built expressly
for his wife, Tiye. He also built many temples in
the city of Thebes. One such temple was built to
Amen. This temple was decorated with gold and
silver, precious stones, ...
Related: amenhotep, ancient cities, high priest, discriminating, mobile